From a Miami condo to the Venezuelan coast, how a plan to 'capture' Maduro went rogue
Source: Washington Post
From a Miami condo to the Venezuelan coast, how a plan to capture Maduro went rogue
By Anthony Faiola, Karen DeYoung and Ana Vanessa Herrero
May 6, 2020 at 7:34 p.m. EDT
Inside a glittering Miami high-rise, representatives of the Venezuelan opposition sat in a room adorned with samurai swords and listened to a pitch. They had been appointed by opposition leader Juan Guaidó to explore all options in their U.S.-backed quest to oust Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. On that afternoon on the shores of Biscayne Bay last September, a former U.S. Army Green Beret presented them with an answer.
Operation Resolution.
Jordan Goudreau, a 43-year-old Special Forces veteran who ran a strategic-security firm on the Florida Space Coast, laid out a plan that could double as a screenplay for an episode of Jack Ryan. Goudreau claimed to have 800 men ready to penetrate Venezuela and extract Maduro and his henchmen, according to J.J. Rendón, the Venezuelan political strategist tapped by Guaidó to help lead the secretive committee.
Guaidó was saying all options were on the table, and under the table, Rendón told The Washington Post. We were fulfilling that purpose.
By October, the plan had advanced to the point of a signed agreement, contingent on funding and other conditions. Rendón calls it a trial balloon, a test of what Goudreau could do that was never officially greenlighted. But the language of the agreement left no ambiguity on the objective: An operation to capture/detain/remove Nicolás Maduro .?.?. remove the current Regime and install the recognized Venezuelan President Juan Guaidó.
But soon after the signing, Rendón said, Goudreau began acting erratically. He failed to produce evidence of the financial backing he claimed to have lined up to fund the operation, Rendón said, and demanded immediate payment of a $1.5 million retainer. There was no evidence of 800 men. Rendón transferred him $50,000 for expenses to buy more time, but the relationship between the two men quickly went south.
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Read more: https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/from-a-miami-condo-to-the-venezuelan-coast-how-a-plan-to-capture-maduro-went-rogue/2020/05/06/046222bc-8e4a-11ea-9322-a29e75effc93_story.html