Berliner Boersenzeitung - Operation Venezuela: Scenario

EUR -
AED 4.327013
AFN 74.799506
ALL 95.44918
AMD 434.632751
ANG 2.108473
AOA 1081.398388
ARS 1641.143952
AUD 1.623621
AWG 2.120389
AZN 2.006455
BAM 1.957801
BBD 2.372845
BDT 144.81802
BGN 1.965014
BHD 0.444516
BIF 3505.710256
BMD 1.177994
BND 1.495961
BOB 8.14032
BRL 5.788075
BSD 1.178124
BTN 112.228138
BWP 15.840325
BYN 3.294595
BYR 23088.683139
BZD 2.369452
CAD 1.609658
CDF 2604.545214
CHF 0.91602
CLF 0.026856
CLP 1057.019122
CNY 8.00443
CNH 8.00103
COP 4430.341336
CRC 539.956478
CUC 1.177994
CUP 31.216842
CVE 110.760844
CZK 24.332528
DJF 209.352695
DKK 7.473182
DOP 69.678399
DZD 155.548198
EGP 62.101135
ERN 17.669911
ETB 183.954984
FJD 2.570975
FKP 0.863991
GBP 0.863393
GEL 3.151149
GGP 0.863991
GHS 13.299276
GIP 0.863991
GMD 85.993551
GNF 10339.844194
GTQ 8.991412
GYD 246.413954
HKD 9.22188
HNL 31.326285
HRK 7.535742
HTG 154.190872
HUF 355.944446
IDR 20520.06714
ILS 3.418362
IMP 0.863991
INR 112.280561
IQD 1543.397172
IRR 1545001.028178
ISK 143.608926
JEP 0.863991
JMD 185.861548
JOD 0.835217
JPY 185.065262
KES 152.020463
KGS 103.015363
KHR 4726.831334
KMF 492.401267
KPW 1060.194583
KRW 1735.562101
KWD 0.362716
KYD 0.981812
KZT 545.822523
LAK 25844.635416
LBP 105501.229303
LKR 379.491103
LRD 215.603115
LSL 19.363156
LTL 3.47831
LVL 0.712557
LYD 7.451743
MAD 10.741679
MDL 20.192811
MGA 4898.047916
MKD 61.655417
MMK 2473.229623
MNT 4213.339863
MOP 9.500832
MRU 47.042482
MUR 55.047458
MVR 18.142479
MWK 2042.905413
MXN 20.25266
MYR 4.620681
MZN 75.285788
NAD 19.363156
NGN 1607.514748
NIO 43.356155
NOK 10.814368
NPR 179.564058
NZD 1.97433
OMR 0.452936
PAB 1.178104
PEN 4.047437
PGK 5.117317
PHP 71.981913
PKR 328.199428
PLN 4.238652
PYG 7241.37073
QAR 4.304628
RON 5.203434
RSD 117.390626
RUB 86.684882
RWF 1722.975694
SAR 4.419578
SBD 9.446843
SCR 16.494848
SDG 707.384876
SEK 10.854389
SGD 1.494126
SHP 0.879492
SLE 29.037764
SLL 24701.941457
SOS 673.293895
SRD 44.061101
STD 24382.09822
STN 24.525484
SVC 10.308668
SYP 130.224809
SZL 19.357114
THB 38.04038
TJS 11.027312
TMT 4.122979
TND 3.418215
TOP 2.836327
TRY 53.443945
TTD 7.986231
TWD 36.958389
TZS 3077.508119
UAH 51.77576
UGX 4429.565099
USD 1.177994
UYU 46.968669
UZS 14304.803211
VES 588.096996
VND 31010.693043
VUV 139.683928
WST 3.188944
XAF 656.633725
XAG 0.013721
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.183588
XCG 2.123297
XDR 0.816642
XOF 656.639305
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.098838
ZAR 19.342423
ZMK 10603.360584
ZMW 22.275051
ZWL 379.3136
  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.12

    +0.04%

  • RBGPF

    0.2700

    63.18

    +0.43%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    87.16

    +0.31%

  • RIO

    2.6700

    108.05

    +2.47%

  • GSK

    -0.5850

    49.825

    -1.17%

  • RELX

    -0.2600

    33.32

    -0.78%

  • BP

    0.9150

    44.255

    +2.07%

  • RYCEF

    0.4200

    16.79

    +2.5%

  • BTI

    1.9150

    60.195

    +3.18%

  • BCE

    0.1400

    24.28

    +0.58%

  • CMSD

    0.0763

    23.61

    +0.32%

  • BCC

    -1.3800

    69.29

    -1.99%

  • AZN

    -0.8900

    181.96

    -0.49%

  • JRI

    -0.0196

    13.1301

    -0.15%

  • VOD

    0.1270

    16.327

    +0.78%


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.