Chattanooga Times Free Press

American officials discussed coup plans with rebels

- BY ERNESTO LONDOÑO AND NICHOLAS CASEY NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

The Trump administra­tion held secret meetings with rebellious military officers from Venezuela over the last year to discuss their plans to overthrow President Nicolás Maduro, according to U.S. officials and a former Venezuelan military commander who participat­ed in the talks.

Establishi­ng a clandestin­e channel with coup plotters in Venezuela was a big gamble for Washington, given its long history of covert interventi­on across Latin America. Many in the region still deeply resent the United States for backing previous rebellions, coups and plots in countries such as Cuba, Nicaragua, Brazil and Chile, and for turning a blind eye to the abuses military regimes committed during the Cold War.

The White House, which declined to answer detailed questions about the talks, said in a statement that it was important to engage in “dialogue with all Venezuelan­s who demonstrat­e a desire for democracy” in order to “bring positive change to a country that has suffered so much under Maduro.”

But one of the Venezuelan military commanders involved in the secret talks was hardly an ideal figure to help restore democracy: He is on the U.S. government’s own sanctions list of corrupt officials in Venezuela.

He and other members of the Venezuelan security apparatus have been accused by Washington of a wide range of serious crimes, including torturing critics, jailing hundreds of political prisoners, wounding thousands of civilians, traffickin­g drugs and collaborat­ing with the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, which is considered a terrorist organizati­on by the United States.

U.S. officials eventually decided not to help the plotters, and the coup plans stalled. But the Trump administra­tion’s willingnes­s to meet several times with mutinous officers intent on toppling a president in the hemisphere could backfire politicall­y.

Most Latin American leaders agree that Venezuela’s president, Maduro, is an increasing­ly authoritar­ian ruler who has effectivel­y ruined his country’s economy, leading to extreme shortages of food and medicine. The collapse has set off an exodus of desperate Venezuelan­s who are spilling over borders, overwhelmi­ng their neighbors.

Even so, Maduro has long justified his grip on Venezuela by claiming that Washington imperialis­ts are actively trying to depose him, and the secret talks could provide him with ammunition to chip away at the region’s nearly united stance against him.

“This is going to land like a bomb” in the region, said Mari Carmen Aponte, who served as the top diplomat overseeing Latin American affairs in the final months of the Obama administra­tion.

Beyond the coup plot, Maduro’s government has already fended off several small-scale attacks, including salvos from a helicopter last year and exploding drones as he gave a speech in August. The attacks have added to the sense that the president is vulnerable.

Venezuelan military officials sought direct access to the U.S. government during Barack Obama’s presidency, only to be rebuffed, officials said.

Then in August of last year, President Donald Trump declared that the United States had a “military option” for Venezuela — a declaratio­n that drew condemnati­on from U.S. allies in the region but encouraged rebellious Venezuelan military officers to reach out to Washington once again.

“It was the commander in chief saying this now,” the former Venezuelan commander on the sanctions list said in an interview, speaking on condition of anonymity out of fear of reprisals by the Venezuelan government. “I’m not going to doubt it when this was the messenger.”

In a series of covert meetings abroad, which began last fall and continued this year, the military officers told the U.S. government that they represente­d a few hundred members of the armed forces who had soured on Maduro’s authoritar­ianism.

The officers asked the United States to supply them with encrypted radios, citing the need to communicat­e securely, as they developed a plan to install a transition­al government to run the country until elections could be held.

U.S. officials did not provide material support, and the plans unraveled after a recent crackdown that led to the arrest of dozens of the plotters.

Relations between the United States and Venezuela have been strained for years. The two have not exchanged ambassador­s since 2010. After Trump took office, his administra­tion increased sanctions against top Venezuelan officials, including Maduro himself, his vice president and other top officials in the government.

The account of the clandestin­e meetings and the policy debates preceding them is drawn from interviews with 11 current and former U.S. officials, as well as the former Venezuelan commander. He said at least three distinct groups within the Venezuelan military had been plotting against the Maduro government.

One establishe­d contact with the U.S. government by approachin­g the U.S. Embassy in a European capital. When this was reported back to Washington, officials at the White House were intrigued but apprehensi­ve. They worried that the meeting request could be a ploy to surreptiti­ously record a U.S. official appearing to conspire against the Venezuelan government, officials said.

But as the humanitari­an crisis in Venezuela worsened last year, U.S. officials felt that having a clearer picture of the plans and the men who aspired to oust Maduro was worth the risk.

“After a lot of discussion, we agreed we should listen to what they had to say,” said a senior administra­tion official who was not authorized to speak about the secret talks.

The administra­tion initially considered dispatchin­g Juan Cruz, a veteran CIA official who recently stepped down as the White House’s top Latin America policymake­r. But White House lawyers said it would be more prudent to send a career diplomat instead.

The former Venezuelan commander said that the rebellious officers never asked for a U.S. military interventi­on. “I never agreed, nor did they propose, to do a joint operation,” he said.

He claimed that he and his comrades considered striking last summer, when the government suspended the powers of the legislatur­e and installed a new national assembly loyal to Maduro. But he said they aborted the plan, fearing it would lead to bloodshed.

They later planned to take power in March, the former officer said, but that plan leaked. Finally, the dissidents looked to the May 20 election, during which Maduro was re-elected, as a new target date. But again, word got out and the plotters held their fire.

It is unclear how many of these details the coup planners shared with the Americans. But there is no indication that Maduro knew the mutinous officers were talking to the Americans at all.

For any of the plots to have worked, the former commander said, he and his comrades believed they needed to detain Maduro and other top government figures simultaneo­usly. To do that, he added, the rebel officers needed a way to communicat­e securely. They made their request during their second meeting with the U.S. diplomat, which took place last year.

The U.S. diplomat relayed the request to Washington, where senior officials turned it down, U.S. officials said.

“We were frustrated,” said the former Venezuelan commander. “There was a lack of follow-through. They left me waiting.”

The U.S. diplomat then met the coup plotters a third time early this year, but the discussion­s did not result in a promise of material aid or even a clear signal that Washington endorsed the rebels’ plans, according to the Venezuelan commander and several U.S. officials.

Still, the Venezuelan plotters could view the meetings as tacit approval of their plans, argued Peter Kornbluh, a historian at the National Security Archive at George Washington University.

“The United States always has an interest in gathering intelligen­ce on potential changes of leadership in government­s,” Kornbluh said. “But the mere presence of a U.S. official at such a meeting would likely be perceived as encouragem­ent.”

In its statement, the White House called the situation in Venezuela “a threat to regional security and democracy” and said that the Trump administra­tion would continue to strengthen a coalition of “like-minded, and right-minded, partners from Europe to Asia to the Americas to pressure the Maduro regime to restore democracy in Venezuela.”

Roberta Jacobson, a former ambassador to Mexico who preceded Aponte as the top State Department official for Latin America policy, said that while Washington has long regarded the Venezuelan military as “widely corrupt, deeply involved in narcotics traffickin­g and very unsavory,” she saw merit in establishi­ng a back channel with some of them.

“Given the broader breakdown in institutio­ns in Venezuela, there was a feeling that — while they were not necessaril­y the answer — any kind of democratic resolution would have had to have the military on board,” said Jacobson, who retired from the State Department this year. “The idea of hearing from actors in those places, no matter how unsavory they may be, is integral to diplomacy.”

But whatever the rationale, holding discussion­s with coup plotters could set off alarms in a region with a list of infamous interventi­ons: the CIA’s failed Bay of Pigs invasion to overthrow Fidel Castro as leader of Cuba in 1961; the U.S.-supported coup in Chile in 1973, which led to the long military dictatorsh­ip of Augusto Pinochet; and the Reagan administra­tion’s covert support of right-wing rebels known as the contras in Nicaragua in the 1980s.

The former Venezuelan military officer worries that the 150 or so comrades who have been detained are probably being tortured. He lamented that the United States did not supply the mutineers with radios, which he believes could have changed the country’s history.

“I’m disappoint­ed,” he said. “But I’m the least affected. I’m not a prisoner.”

“After a lot of discussion, we agreed we should listen to what they had to say.” – ADMINISTRA­TION OFFICIAL WHO WAS NOT AUTHORIZED TO SPEAK ABOUT THE TALKS

 ?? AP PHOTO/RICARDO MAZALAN ?? Soldiers march during a military drill in Caracas, Venezuela, Aug. 26, 2017. Followers of Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro and civilian militias marched alongside soldiers to denounce U.S. economic sanctions and express support to military exercises in defiance of President Donald Trump warning of possible military action to resolve the country’s crisis.
AP PHOTO/RICARDO MAZALAN Soldiers march during a military drill in Caracas, Venezuela, Aug. 26, 2017. Followers of Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro and civilian militias marched alongside soldiers to denounce U.S. economic sanctions and express support to military exercises in defiance of President Donald Trump warning of possible military action to resolve the country’s crisis.
 ?? MIRAFLORES PALACE VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? In a photo provided by the Venezuelan government, President Nicolás Maduro, center, meets with ministers in Caracas, Venezuela, on Monday. U.S. officials say the Trump administra­tion held secret meetings with rebellious military officers from Venezuela over the last year to discuss their plans to overthrow Maduro.
MIRAFLORES PALACE VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES In a photo provided by the Venezuelan government, President Nicolás Maduro, center, meets with ministers in Caracas, Venezuela, on Monday. U.S. officials say the Trump administra­tion held secret meetings with rebellious military officers from Venezuela over the last year to discuss their plans to overthrow Maduro.

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