The Province

Venezuela coup-plotters asked U.S. for help

Military officers’ plan to overthrow Maduro eventually turned down by Trump administra­tion

- KAREN DEYOUNG AND GREG JAFFE

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion met several times last year and early this year with Venezuelan military officers purporting to be dissidents plotting a coup against President Nicolás Maduro, but ultimately rebuffed their requests for assistance.

The operation was small and closely-held, according to one senior official, who described the meetings as “all listening. We listen to anyone who wants to talk to us.”

President Donald Trump, both publicly and privately, has raised the possibilit­y of U.S. military action in Venezuela, although aides have repeatedly dissuaded him, according to a number of officials and people familiar with the episodes, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss foreign policy and intelligen­ce matters.

Maduro has frequently accused the United States of plotting with his opponents, and of economic and actual warfare against him.

The outreach by the officers “highlighte­d the level of desperatio­n” in Venezuela, and the Trump administra­tion was eager to understand what was going on inside the armed forces, according to a person familiar with meetings.

But “we had very little confidence in the ability of these people to do anything, no idea at all about who they represente­d, and to what extent they had not exposed themselves already,” the person said.

The Venezuelan government did not publicly respond to a report about such meetings, which first appeared Saturday in The New York Times. A spokesman said that Maduro or other officials would comment “at the right moment, if they consider it necessary.”

White House National Security Council spokesman Garrett Marquis said in a statement “the United States government hears daily the concerns of Venezuelan­s from all walks of life — be they members of the ruling party, the security services, elements of civil society or from among the millions of citizens forced by the regime to flee abroad.”

“U.S. policy preference for a peaceful, orderly return to democracy in Venezuela remains unchanged,” the statement said.

Venezuela is in the midst of hyperinfla­tion and severe humanitari­an and political crises that have sent millions fleeing to other countries in the hemisphere.

In a televised address early this year, Maduro appealed to Pope Francis “to prevent Trump from sending his troops to invade Venezuela.”

Trump has denounced Maduro, who took over in 2013 following the death of Hugo Chávez, as a “dictator.” Maduro has twice been elected president since then in votes widely seen as fraudulent, and has gradually taken over virtually all legislativ­e and judicial power and jailed numerous political opponents.

In August 2017, Trump told reporters that “we have many options for Venezuela, including a possible military option if necessary.”

Just before those comments, he had raised the issue privately with senior advisers, asking then-national security adviser H.R. McMaster: “Why don’t we just invade? We’ve done it in other parts of the world,” according to current and former officials who said that McMaster recommende­d “other approaches.”

Trump also raised the possibilit­y of an invasion with Latin American leaders at last year’s United Nations General Assembly, despite efforts by McMaster and others to steer him away from the subject.

The administra­tion has imposed sanctions on a number of Venezuelan officials, including senior military officers.

Officials have long said further measures are under considerat­ion, including an embargo on Venezuelan oil. Despite sharply falling oil exports in recent years, Venezuela is the fourth-largest foreign supplier to the United States. China and Russia have extended massive loans to prop up the government.

While some administra­tion officials and outside advisers have pushed for more muscular U.S. involvemen­t against Maduro, many have expressed dismay at the political opposition’s failure to mobilize resistance, and at what appears to be fairly solid support for him within the military.

Adam Isacson, of the Washington Office on Latin America, said few U.S. administra­tions would pass up the opportunit­y to meet with alleged coup plotters at least once, given the opacity of the Venezuelan military.

“You’re trying to glean an understand­ing of a part of Venezuelan society, the military, that none of us knows very much about,” although the decision to meet several times posed a risk of becoming exposed and sparking a backlash in the hemisphere, he said.

A majority of Latin American government­s have denounced Maduro, as has the secretary general of the Organizati­on of American States. But all are aware of the unpopular history of U.S. military interventi­on in the hemisphere, and there is little appetite for a repeat.

 ?? — AP PHOTO ?? While there have been signs of dissent in Venezuela, including these retirees who took to the streets on Thursday to demand their full pensions, U.S. officials are frustrated by the lack of a coordinate­d resistance.
— AP PHOTO While there have been signs of dissent in Venezuela, including these retirees who took to the streets on Thursday to demand their full pensions, U.S. officials are frustrated by the lack of a coordinate­d resistance.

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