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Maduro has left but it is unclear who will be running Venezuela

Donald Trump praised the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro as "stunning and powerful". But it is unclear who will be running this oil-rich nation.

Trump claimed on Saturday that Vice President Delcy Rodrguez, a member of the cabal that controls the government in Venezuela, was sworn into office after Maduro’s arrest. He also said that she had spoken to U.S. secretary of state Marco Rubio and that this led to speculations that she would be taking the reins.

According to Venezuela's constitution Rodriguez will assume the role of acting president in the absence of Maduro. The country's highest court has ordered that she take on the role as late Saturday night.

Rodriguez appeared on Venezuelan state television shortly after Trump made his remarks. She was flanked by her sister, Jorge Rodriguez, head of Venezuela's National Assembly, Diosdado Cabello, and Vladimir Padrino Lopez, Defense Minister. They all said that Maduro is Venezuela's sole president. The group that shares power with Maduro appears to be staying together for the time being.

Trump said that he would not work with Maria Corina Machado - the opposition leader and Nobel Prize-winning Maria Corina Machado - who is widely regarded as Maduro’s most credible rival if she did not have any support in the country.

International observers claim that despite Maduro’s government's claims of victory, Machado's stand-in candidate has won in a landslide.

CIVILIAN-MILITARY POWER BALANCE

Since more than a century, the real power in Venezuela is held by a few senior officials. Analysts and government officials claim that the system is based on a vast network of loyalists who are backed by security organs and corruption.

In the inner circle there is a balance between civilians and military. Each member has his or her own patronage network and interests. Rodriguez and her brother currently represent the civilian side. Padrino, Cabello and other military personnel represent the civilian side.

According to interviews conducted with former and current U.S. government officials, Venezuelan military analysts, U.S. military experts, and security consultants for Venezuela's opposition, this power structure makes it more difficult to dismantle Venezuela's present government than to remove Maduro.

"You can remove any number of pieces from the Venezuelan government, but you would need multiple actors on different levels in order to make a difference," said a former U.S. Official involved in criminal investigations.

Cabello is a big question mark. He exerts influence on the military and civil?counterintelligence agencies of the country, which are involved in widespread domestic espionage.

Jose Garcia, Venezuelan military strategist, said that the focus was now on Diosdado Cabello. Because he is the most violent, ideological and unpredictable element in the Venezuelan regime. Both SEBIN (the civilian agency) and DGCIM (the military intelligence service) were found guilty of crimes against humanity by the United Nations as part a plan to suppress dissent. In interviews conducted before Maduro was captured, 11 former detainees -- including some security personnel who had been there themselves -- described the electric shocks and simulated drownings they experienced at DGCIM's black sites.

A former DGCIM officer who had contact with military dissidents was arrested in 2020 and charged with treason. Cabello appeared on TV in recent weeks to order the DGCIM "to go and get the terrorists", and warn "whoever strays we will know". This was as the United States began its largest military buildup in Latin America for decades.

In a Saturday appearance on state television, he repeated his rhetoric while wearing a flak-jacket and helmet, and surrounded with heavily armed guards.

Cabello has also been closely linked with pro-government groups, including motorcycle-riding civilians armed on the streets known as colectivos.

GENERALS CONTROL KEY AREAS

Cabello, former military officer, and major player in socialist party, has influence on a "meaningful" fraction of Venezuela's armed forces despite the fact that Venezuela's military is formally led by Defense Minister Padrino since more than 10 years. Venezuela has 2,000 generals, admirals and other military officers. This is more than twice the number of the United States. Senior officers and retired officers are in charge of food distribution, raw materials, and the PDVSA state oil company, while dozens more generals serve on private firm boards.

Defectors, current and former U.S. Investigators, and others say that military officials benefit from illicit trade beyond contracts.

According to documents shared by an opposition security advisor with the U.S. Military and seen by, commanders close Cabello and Padrino have been assigned to key brigades near Venezuela's border and industrial hubs.

While tactically important to the brigades, they also lie on major smuggling routes.

A lawyer who represented a senior Venezuelan leader said that "there are between 20 and 50 officers who must leave the Venezuelan army, possibly even more," to remove this regime.

Some may be thinking about jumping ship. The lawyer stated that approximately a dozen former and current officials had reached out to the U.S. after Maduro was captured, in order to make a deal by providing intelligence for safe passage and immunity.

The lawyer stated that Cabello's close friends said he wasn't interested in negotiating a deal at this time.

(source: Reuters)