The Japan Times - Operation Venezuela: Scenario

EUR -
AED 4.274525
AFN 72.747251
ALL 95.444012
AMD 426.573239
ANG 2.083964
AOA 1068.48527
ARS 1630.661812
AUD 1.624031
AWG 2.095069
AZN 1.981826
BAM 1.955677
BBD 2.335853
BDT 142.541058
BGN 1.943665
BHD 0.437373
BIF 3453.466891
BMD 1.163927
BND 1.485445
BOB 8.013497
BRL 5.84664
BSD 1.159727
BTN 110.915042
BWP 15.685016
BYN 3.1842
BYR 22812.968849
BZD 2.332454
CAD 1.607721
CDF 2624.655534
CHF 0.910278
CLF 0.026541
CLP 1044.566471
CNY 7.908593
CNH 7.894556
COP 4285.125217
CRC 524.867073
CUC 1.163927
CUP 30.844065
CVE 110.258083
CZK 24.277131
DJF 206.517044
DKK 7.472603
DOP 68.355712
DZD 154.890326
EGP 60.898517
ERN 17.458905
ETB 186.964271
FJD 2.560405
FKP 0.86652
GBP 0.863412
GEL 3.096354
GGP 0.86652
GHS 13.465155
GIP 0.86652
GMD 84.394944
GNF 10168.730359
GTQ 8.843445
GYD 242.594781
HKD 9.119426
HNL 30.855064
HRK 7.534125
HTG 151.935737
HUF 357.199302
IDR 20644.572882
ILS 3.361131
IMP 0.86652
INR 110.808758
IQD 1519.204694
IRR 1540340.96826
ISK 143.748419
JEP 0.86652
JMD 183.078515
JOD 0.825216
JPY 184.97941
KES 150.9617
KGS 101.785253
KHR 4649.705727
KMF 494.669086
KPW 1047.534327
KRW 1759.002106
KWD 0.360131
KYD 0.966439
KZT 547.675642
LAK 25416.405525
LBP 103878.683266
LKR 387.915664
LRD 212.226686
LSL 19.1293
LTL 3.436773
LVL 0.704048
LYD 7.390536
MAD 10.698929
MDL 20.115738
MGA 4872.694316
MKD 61.622398
MMK 2443.776788
MNT 4165.738167
MOP 9.360513
MRU 46.343093
MUR 55.030144
MVR 17.928737
MWK 2010.973843
MXN 20.10422
MYR 4.603911
MZN 74.319022
NAD 19.1293
NGN 1591.239066
NIO 42.695663
NOK 10.764461
NPR 177.463867
NZD 1.981301
OMR 0.447528
PAB 1.159727
PEN 3.954052
PGK 5.057683
PHP 71.445302
PKR 322.883144
PLN 4.235472
PYG 7067.556623
QAR 4.240134
RON 5.246516
RSD 117.394165
RUB 82.635466
RWF 1695.493635
SAR 4.353127
SBD 9.364005
SCR 17.274467
SDG 699.003515
SEK 10.815197
SGD 1.486681
SHP 0.868989
SLE 28.630504
SLL 24406.969301
SOS 662.758422
SRD 43.244507
STD 24090.93857
STN 24.508991
SVC 10.147363
SYP 128.643021
SZL 19.1248
THB 37.769548
TJS 10.773924
TMT 4.073744
TND 3.394987
TOP 2.802457
TRY 53.211506
TTD 7.871506
TWD 36.558859
TZS 3049.878648
UAH 51.32788
UGX 4391.724489
USD 1.163927
UYU 46.427087
UZS 13914.12711
VES 612.470595
VND 30682.279175
VUV 138.331965
WST 3.171465
XAF 655.915852
XAG 0.015023
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.145571
XCG 2.090169
XDR 0.815749
XOF 655.915852
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.771363
ZAR 19.032243
ZMK 10476.742633
ZMW 21.83163
ZWL 374.784013
  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.73

    +0.04%

  • NGG

    0.1900

    86.61

    +0.22%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    51.38

    -0.29%

  • BCE

    0.2100

    24.6

    +0.85%

  • AZN

    -2.7200

    187.03

    -1.45%

  • BTI

    -0.3700

    65.36

    -0.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.66

    +0.04%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    63.5

    0%

  • RIO

    -0.5300

    104.23

    -0.51%

  • BP

    -0.5100

    44.36

    -1.15%

  • BCC

    0.0500

    67.16

    +0.07%

  • RELX

    -0.3300

    33.01

    -1%

  • VOD

    -0.1700

    14.94

    -1.14%

  • RYCEF

    0.1600

    16.64

    +0.96%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.87

    +0.39%


Operation Venezuela: Scenario




The United States has surged naval power into the southern Caribbean under the banner of “enhanced counter-narcotics” operations, while Venezuela has mobilized forces and militias at home. Against this backdrop, security planners are gaming out a scenario sometimes dubbed “Operation Venezuela”: a coercive campaign designed to capture or incapacitate Nicolás Maduro’s ruling circle without a prolonged occupation. What follows is a non-fiction analysis—anchored in current, publicly reported facts—of how such an operation would likely be built.

Phase 0: Political framing and legal scaffolding
Before the first shot, Washington would frame action as a transnational crime and regional security problem—drug-cartel interdiction, hostage/prisoner issues, and the defense of maritime commerce—while tightening energy and financial sanctions to constrict cash flows. Expect parallel diplomacy at the Organization of American States, quiet outreach to Caribbean partners for port and air access, and coordination with the Netherlands (Curaçao/Aruba) and Colombia on overflight and logistics. The immediate aim is legitimacy, basing, and intelligence sharing—without conceding that regime change is the objective.

Phase 1: Maritime and air “quarantine,” intelligence dominance
With destroyers, a cruiser, and an amphibious assault ship already in theater, the opening move would be sea control: persistent patrols, air and surface interdictions, and boarding of suspect craft outside Venezuelan territorial waters. Overhead, ISR aircraft and space-based assets would build a detailed picture of Venezuelan command-and-control, air defenses, and leadership movements. Electronic warfare and cyber units would probe networks, map radar coverage, and seed access for later disruption.

Phase 2: Blinding the air defenses (SEAD/DEAD)
Any kinetic step ashore would first require suppressing Venezuela’s layered air defenses, which include long-range S-300-class systems, medium-range batteries, and a radar network anchored around key urban and oil-infrastructure hubs. The likely playbook: stand-off jamming, decoys, cyber effects against air-defense command nodes, and precision strikes on select radars and launchers. The objective isn’t to raze the entire integrated air defense system, but to carve a time-limited corridor for special operations aviation and maritime helicopters.

Phase 3: “Decapitation” raids and denial of escape
If the operation sought to detain Maduro or senior figures, special mission units would move near-simultaneously against leadership safe sites, communications hubs, and key airports (to deny flight). Maritime teams could sabotage executive transport and pier-side escape options, while airborne elements secure runways for short windows. The template is historical: neutralize mobility, isolate the inner circle, exploit surprise—and exfiltrate quickly if the political costs spike.

Phase 4: Precision punishment without invasion
Should detention prove unworkable, an intermediate option is calibrated strikes against regime-critical assets: intelligence headquarters, military logistics depots, and select revenue nodes tied to illicit finance—while avoiding broad infrastructure damage. This keeps the campaign within days, not months, and reduces the risk of urban combat in Caracas or Maracaibo.

What could go wrong
Air denial is not trivial. Even a partially functional S-300 umbrella complicates rotary-wing ingress near the capital. Urban complexity. Caracas favors defenders; militias and security services could draw raids into dense neighborhoods. External spoilers. Advisers from partner states, and offshore intelligence support to Caracas, can raise the cost and duration of any action. Regional blowback. Mexico and others oppose foreign intervention; without a clear regional mandate, sustained operations risk isolating Washington diplomatically. Oil shock and migration. Renewed sanctions and kinetic action could squeeze supplies and push new refugee flows toward Colombia, Brazil, and the Caribbean.

Signals to watch if the crisis escalates
- Additional amphibious shipping or Marine aviation assets entering the theater.
- Surge of aerial refueling tankers and electronic-attack aircraft to forward locations.
- Cyber disruptions at Venezuelan ministries, state media, or airport systems.
- “Maritime safety” notices suggesting wider exclusion zones off the Venezuelan coast.
- Expanded coordination cells announced by U.S. Southern Command with regional partners.

Bottom line
The most plausible U.S. approach is coercive capture—short, sharp, and intelligence-led—nested inside a broader maritime and sanctions squeeze. A full-scale invasion is unlikely and unnecessary for the campaign’s immediate aims. Yet even a limited raid carries real risks: air-defense attrition, urban friction, regional polarization, and economic blowback. In crisis management terms, the escalatory ladder is crowded—and every rung is slippery.