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INSIDE OPERATION ABSOLUTE RESOLVE: HOW DELTA FORCE GRABBED MADURO
This wasn't a spur-of-the-moment decision.
The operation to capture Nicolás Maduro, code-named Operation Absolute Resolve, had been planned for months with a core team that included Stephen Miller, Marco Rubio, Pete Hegseth, and CIA Director John Ratcliffe holding regular meetings with Trump.
Delta Force built an exact replica of Maduro's safe house and rehearsed the raid repeatedly.
The CIA placed a small team on the ground in Venezuela starting in August to track his movements.
They also had an asset close to Maduro who could pinpoint his exact location when the operation launched.
The Pentagon quietly moved massive firepower into the Caribbean: an aircraft carrier, 11 warships, over a dozen F-35s, refueling tankers, drones, and electronic jamming aircraft.
More than 15,000 troops poured into the region under the cover of anti-drug operations.
Trump approved the mission 4 days ago, but military planners asked him to wait for better weather and less cloud cover.
At 10:46 PM EST yesterday, he gave the final go-ahead.
Over 150 aircraft launched from 20 bases across the Western Hemisphere, including F-35s, F-22s, and B-1 bombers, striking air defense systems around Caracas.
Trump watched the live stream from Mar-a-Lago as Special Forces flew into the capital at low altitude under heavy fire.
One helicopter took a hit but kept flying. Residents posted videos of the convoy.
The troops brought blowtorches to cut through steel doors.
When they breached Maduro's "fortress," he tried to reach a panic room but "got bum rushed so fast" he couldn't close the door.
He and his wife surrendered to Special Forces and FBI agents inside.
As they left Venezuelan territory, multiple firefights erupted.
By 3:20 AM, helicopters were over water with Maduro blindfolded and handcuffed.
7 hours later, Trump posted a photo of him aboard the USS Iwo Jima.
Source: Reuters