The Sunday Telegraph

How naive US mercenarie­s blew their coup

Ex-Special Forces soldiers lacked everything in their attempt to oust Venezuelan leader – except ‘cojones’

- By Cody Weddle in Bogota and Colin Freeman

‘Goudreau saw an oppressed people and proposed to himself the cause of achieving a change in government’

‘Strikeforc­e incursion into Venezuela, 60 Venezuelan, two American ex-Green beret. @realDonald­Trump’

EVER since he fled Venezuela last year, opposition senator Hernán Alemán has dreamed of toppling Nicolás Maduro, the president. But like many of the exiles now holed up in next-door Colombia, he knew that those who talked of doing it by force were often big on words and short on action.

So when he met Jordan Goudreau, an ex-US Special Forces soldier turned mercenary, he finally thought he had the right man. “He seemed to have the skills necessary to lead a battle like this,” Mr Alemán told The Telegraph last week. “In order to make this successful, you needed four elements: men, a good plan, resources, and – excuse this phrase – a good set of ‘cojones’, or testicles.”

As it turned out, “cojones” was about the only thing the plan had. Last Sunday, Mr Goudreau’s brazen mission to overthrow Mr Maduro’s socialist rule ended in disaster, when his 60-strong seaborne “strike force” was caught by Venezuelan forces on the country’s northern coast.

Eight men were killed, while others are now in custody, including two of Mr Goudreau’s old Green Beret comrades, Luke Denman and Airan Berry. On Thursday, Mr Denman made a televised confession on Venezuelan TV, saying he was being paid $100,000 to arrest Mr Maduro and fly him to America. The aim, he said, was to “help Venezuelan­s take back control of their country”.

Far from doing that, the botched mission has handed Mr Maduro’s shaky regime its biggest propaganda coup in years. With Mr Goudreau having boasted – apparently falsely – of having President Donald Trump’s tacit backing, Mr Maduro has accused the White House of sponsoring a “terrorist” uprising. “They were playing Rambo,” he declared triumphant­ly.

Mr Trump has denied backing the operation, saying, if he had, it would not have been so amateurish.

After all, how did the mercenarie­s expected to travel 30 miles to the Venezuelan capital without being challenged? And how, with just 60 lightly-armed men, would they penetrate the heavy security around Mr Maduro’s presidenti­al compound, let alone take him back to the US?

One answer may be that Mr Goudreau simply talked a good game – and that among Venezuela’s exiled opposition, there were many willing to hear his sales pitch. Just as Miami is home to many Cuban exiles, the Colombian capital, Bogotá, now hosts a large diaspora of Venezuelan opposition figures and regime defectors, many of them ex-military.

Last January, when Mr Trump formally recognised Juan Guaidó, the Venezuelan opposition leader, as the country’s legitimate ruler, they became certain that Mr Maduro’s days were numbered. But with neither street protests nor internatio­nal pressure having the desired effect, Mr Alemán and others began exploring military options.

It was into this febrile atmosphere that Mr Goudreau arrived, touting the services of his security firm, Silvercorp. On the face of it, his credential­s were impressive. The 43-year-old had served with America’s Green Berets in both Iraq and Afghanista­n. And he had helped organise security at last year’s Venezuela Aid Live concert, organised in Colombia by Sir Richard Branson to pressure Mr Maduro to let in food aid.

“Based on the many times we met, I had a high opinion of him,” says Mr Alemán, who fled Venezuela last year after fearing he was to be detained.

“He saw an oppressed people and proposed to himself the cause of achieving a change in government.”

A closer look at the Silvercorp website might have hinted it was all too good to be true. It boasts of operations in more than 50 countries, with diplomats, top military strategist­s and captains of industry on its payroll. None, though, is named – nor is there any proof of its claim to have advised Britain’s SAS, France’s counter-terrorism service and other elite units worldwide.

Still, Mr Goudreau made enough of an impression to be introduced to both representa­tives of Mr Guaidó and also to Cliver Alcalá, a dissident Venezuelan general who was one of the main agitators for a coup. General Alcalá’s CV was likewise somewhat patchy.

Since 2011, he has been on a US “wanted” list of Venezuelan regime figures accused of traffickin­g hundreds of tons of cocaine to the US. But in 2016, he fell out with Mr Maduro and fled to Bogotá, where he told Mr Goudreau that he had 300 soldiers at his command.

Mr Goudreau offered to train them as a strike force – a task for which he claims to have signed a $200million contract with Mr Guaidó.

Mr Guaidó has denied the claim, with sources close to him saying that talks petered out because the mission seemed like “suicide”.

Mr Goudreau, however, seem determined to press ahead, regardless of the mission’s difficulti­es. In late March, Gen Alcalá voluntaril­y handed himself over to DEA officials in Bogotá, who have now extradited him back to the US to face drug traffickin­g charges.

He did so a day after Washington issued a $10million reward for his capture, along with a $15million bounty on Mr Maduro and several other government figures, whom Washington also accuses of drug traffickin­g. Earlier that month, Gen Alcalá had also been linked to a large cache of US-made assault rifles found by Colombian police, allegedly bought by Mr Goudreau from a Venezuelan-owned gun shop in Miami.

“When Alcalá was extradited, that hurt us, because he was the boss, the Venezuelan official who was at the top of this,” added Mr Alemán. “We lost an important man, we lost arms.”

Worse was to come. On May 1 two days ahead of the mission, the Associated Press wire agency published a full account of the plan, detailing how the troops were woefully under-equipped. Disgruntle­d insiders described it as the work of “anti-Maduro goofballs”.

Yet despite its cover being blown, Mr Goudreau sent his men in last Sunday, apparently believing that Mr Maduro was so unpopular that his security forces would switch sides. He even live-tweeted the mission, apparently hoping for Mr Trump’s backing,

“Strikeforc­e incursion into Venezuela. 60 Venezuelan, two American ex-Green beret. @realDonald­Trump,” it read, tagging the president’s Twitter profile.

Mr Goudreau is currently in the US, having failed to take part in the mission himself because his boat had broken down. He is now facing an FBI probe in connection with the weapons brought from Miami, as well as an arrest warrant from Venezuela.

He has pleaded for help from Washington to get his men back, describing them as “American heroes”, who now risk torture in jail. “Our leaders should burn in hell if they ignore this,” he said.

Yet, as a sworn enemy of Mr Trump, Mr Maduro may demand a very high price to hand the two US servicemen back. Indeed, he may view them as just the insurance policy he needs against any future plan by Washington to dislodge him. To borrow Mr Alemán’s words, the American “cojones” are now very firmly in Mr Maduro’s grasp.

 ??  ?? Ex-US Special Forces ‘mercenary’ Airan Berry, above left, and the mission team were arrested as they landed on the Venezuelan coast
Ex-US Special Forces ‘mercenary’ Airan Berry, above left, and the mission team were arrested as they landed on the Venezuelan coast
 ??  ?? Jordan Goudreau is facing an FBI probe, over guns bought in Miami, below, and a Venezuelan arrest warrant
Jordan Goudreau is facing an FBI probe, over guns bought in Miami, below, and a Venezuelan arrest warrant
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