Miami Herald

Disgraced Venezuela official once close to Maduro ran drug trade, kept ties with Hezbollah

- BY ANTONIO MARIA DELGADO adelgado@elnuevoher­ald.com

Tareck El Aissami, the former Venezuelan vice president who was paraded as a trophy this week in the country’s latest anticorrup­tion drive, was until recently one of the most powerful and influentia­l men in the country, playing multiple roles for ruler Nicolas Maduro that went from oil czar and liaison to Middle East extremists to faction chieftain in the regime’s drug cartel.

Rising quickly through the regime’s ranks by attaching himself to Maduro’s rising star during the turbulent years that followed the illness and death of former president Hugo Chávez, El Aissami was seen as the regime’s number three man until he fell from grace early last year amid charges that a corrupt cabal stole billions of dollars in oil revenues under his nose while he served as oil minister.

El Aissami immediatel­y resigned and was not seen in public since, while Attorney General Tarek William Saab proceeded to arrest dozens of his closest associates, a few of whom died in police custody.

On Tuesday, Saab announced that accounts from five of those arrested claimed El Aissami was the leader of the corruption scheme and that he sought to promote social unrest by bankruptin­g the Venezuelan economy.

“These scoundrels ... used the positions that the State entrusted to them... to ally themselves with shell company businessme­n seeking ... to destroy the economy,” Saab said Tuesday in a press conference in which he accused El Aissami of running a criminal organizati­on from inside Petroleos de Venezuela.

El Aissami was shown on Tuesday being taken into a jail cell by masked policemen. His business partner, Samark López, and former Finance Minister Alejandro Zerpa were also charged. That brought to 57 the number of former regime officials and businessme­n charged with corruption for their alleged roles in the scheme, in which participan­ts pocketed oil revenues that were supposed to go into the state’s coffers.

While the oil revenue allegedly lost in the scheme has been calculated at more than $5 billion, embezzleme­nt of public funds is only one of a long list of crimes long attributed to El Aissami.

U.S. officials believe he is one of the founding members of the so-called Cartel de los Soles, or

Suns Cartel, an organizati­on run by military officers and other regime officials that took over drug operations inside the South American country.

The U.S. detected his involvemen­t during his tenure as interior minister from 2008-12 and later as governor of the state Aragua from 2012-17.

From those positions he “facilitate­d shipments of narcotics from Venezuela” on flights departing from a Venezuelan air base, while also controllin­g routes through Venezuela ports, the U.S. Treasury Department said in 2017.

“He oversaw or partially owned narcotics shipments of over 1,000 kilograms from Venezuela on multiple occasions, including those with the final destinatio­ns of Mexico and the United

States”, Treasury added, saying it was levying sanctions against El Aissami.

The Treasury announceme­nt also made public sanctions against Samark Lopez for providing material assistance and financial support to El Aissami’s narcotics traffickin­g.

According to U.S. officials, El Aissami oversaw drug shipments to Mexican cartels, including Los Zetas, an organizati­on known for its violence, while also providing protection to Colombian drug lord Daniel Barrera Barrera and Venezuelan drug trafficker Hermagoras Gonzalez Polanco.

In a report prepared for a U.S. law enforcemen­t agency, IBI Consultant­s, a security firm specializi­ng in transnatio­nal organized crime in Latin America, said that El Aissami headed one of the two main branches of the Soles cartel, while the other was headed by the regime’s number-two man, Diosdado

Cabello.

This two-prong structure was formed during the final days of Chavez’s presidency and eventually took control of the country’s security apparatus.

“Before his death Chávez named Maduro as his successor, while Cabello and El Aissami focused on building drug traffickin­g structures, placing trusted cadres in key government, military and intelligen­ce positions. These cadres rotate so each can get rich, but none can build an independen­t base of support,” the report said.

“The Cartel, once in complete control of the military and intelligen­ce structures, moved to displace Colombian trafficker­s operating inside Venezuela and consolidat­e their integrated cocaine traffickin­g structures.

With Chávez weakened by cancer and absent for long periods of time for treatment in Cuba, cartel factions led by Diosdado Cabello and Tareck El Aissami maneuvered more freely to consolidat­e power,” the report added.

While most investigat­ions of the cartel’s creation point to a proposal made by Chavez to his top lieutenant­s to use cocaine exports as a weapon against the United States, there was another aspect of El Aissami’s activities that worried the U.S.

“El Aissami represente­d a very dangerous cocktail for the national security of the United States, which is the mixture of classical drug traffickin­g with a connection to Hezbollah,” the Lebanese militant group that has been designated as a terrorist organizati­on by the U..S., said Martín Rodil, an expert who is frequently consulted by different agencies in Washington on security issues linked to Venezuela.

Coming out of a SyrianLeba­nese family, El Assami has for years been considered as the bridge connecting the Caracas socialist movement to extremists in the Middle East.

According to a report prepared in 2016 by the NGO the Center for a Free and Secure Society (SFS), the former vice president “used his political prominence to establish intelligen­ce and financial channels with Islamic countries, particular­ly with Syria, Lebanon, Jordan , Iraq and Iran.

Tareck is not the only member of his family who has close ties to Middle Eastern terrorist organizati­ons. His father, Zaidan El Amin El Aissami, also known as Carlos Zaidan, is an ardent promoter of Islamic Jihad and close to Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, a former military collaborat­or of Saddam Hussein who led the insurgency in Iraq and at one time Given was one of the most wanted men in the world.

Investigat­ions by U.S. agencies showed that the criminal organizati­on headed by El Aissami was one of the main suppliers of the drug network that Hezbollah operates in Europe, Rodil told the Miami Herald.

“The money derived from the sales of these drugs ends up becoming part of the financing that Hezbollah has in Lebanon, and is used in activities that range from terrorist attacks to attacks on the State of Israel,” Rodil said.

Before falling from grace, El Aissami had become an indispensa­ble ally of Maduro’s, which allowed him to rise quickly within the political movement created by Chávez. But over the past decade El Aissami began to differenti­ate himself from his colleagues in government because of the gigantic fortune that he was buidling, and because of a money-laundering network that operated through fictitious companies, said Joseph Humire, executive director of the Center for a Secure Free Society.

In a report the center prepared, Humire said El Aissami used his political prominence to establish intelligen­ce and financial channels with Islamic countries, particular­ly Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq and Iran.

El Aissami, the report said, “developed a sophistica­ted, multi-layered financial network that functions as a criminal-terrorist pipeline to bring Islamic militants to Venezuela and neighborin­g countries, and to send illicit funds from Latin America to the East.”

Antonio Maria Delgado: 305-376-2180, @DelgadoAnt­onioM

 ?? EFE file, 2017 ?? Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro shakes hands with his new Vice President, Tarek El Aissami, during a meeting with ministers at 4F military fort in Caracas, Venezuela. El Aissami, once considered the regime’s number three man, fell from grace in 2023 amid charges that a corrupt cabal stole billions of dollars in oil revenues while he served as oil minister.
EFE file, 2017 Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro shakes hands with his new Vice President, Tarek El Aissami, during a meeting with ministers at 4F military fort in Caracas, Venezuela. El Aissami, once considered the regime’s number three man, fell from grace in 2023 amid charges that a corrupt cabal stole billions of dollars in oil revenues while he served as oil minister.

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