Seoul Protests Erupt Over US Capture of Venezuela's Maduro Near Embassy

A coalition of 38 South Korean civic organizations held a rally outside the US Embassy in Seoul, protesting the US military operation that captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. Acting Venezuelan Ambassador Natasha Faria Fernandez attended, demanding Maduro's immediate release and accusing the US of violating the UN Charter. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio defended the action on multiple news programs, framing it as a targeted law-enforcement operation against an indicted narco-trafficker, not an act of war or invasion. The South Korean government has urged all parties involved to ease tensions in the region.

Key Points: Seoul Protests: Civic Groups Condemn US Capture of Maduro

  • 38 civic groups protest at US Embassy
  • US defends action as law enforcement
  • Rubio rejects "war" characterization
  • Pressure through sanctions to continue
  • South Korea urges de-escalation
4 min read

Civic groups rally against Trump's 'capture' of Venezuela's Maduro near US Embassy in Seoul

Civic groups rally at US Embassy in Seoul, protesting the US military operation that captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. Key figures speak out.

"This was not an invasion. This was a law enforcement operation. - Marco Rubio"

Seoul, Jan 5

A coalition of civic groups on Monday chanted anti-US slogans to protest against the US capture of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro outside the US Embassy in Seoul, condemning US President Donald Trump over a military strike.

The rally involving 38 civic organisations took place after Trump announced Saturday that Maduro and his wife were taken into US custody through a military raid in Caracas, Yonhap News Agency reported.

Acting Venezuelan Ambassador to South Korea Natasha Faria Fernandez attended the rally and called for Maduro's immediate release while accusing the US government of violating the UN Charter.

Kwon Young-kook, leader of the left-wing Justice Party, called on the South Korean government to voice opposition to what he called the US invasion of the South American nation at the rally.

On Sunday, South Korea's foreign ministry urged all involved parties in the situation in Venezuela to ease tensions in the region.

Another rally involving an umbrella group representing 267 civic organisations took place near the embassy on Monday, with participants strongly condemning the US military operation.

The far-left People's Democracy Party plans to deliver a letter demanding Maduro's release to the US Embassy later in the day.

Meanwhile, the Trump administration sought to blunt criticism of its Venezuela operation, arguing that the arrest of Nicolás Maduro was a narrowly targeted law-enforcement action rather than the opening of a new war or military occupation.

Speaking on NBC's Meet the Press, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio rejected the suggestion that the United States is now at war with Venezuela. "There's not a war," Rubio said, adding that Washington is "at war against drug trafficking organisations -- not at war against Venezuela."

Rubio said the operation was conducted under US legal authority to arrest an indicted narco-trafficker and did not amount to an invasion. "This was not an invasion," he said on NBC. "This was a law enforcement operation."

Appearing separately on ABC's This Week, Rubio said US forces were on the ground only briefly to execute the arrest and then withdrew. He emphasised that the mission relied on court warrants and sanctions enforcement rather than congressional authorisation for combat.

Rubio said the administration's focus has now shifted to sustained pressure through sanctions and maritime enforcement. On CBS's Face the Nation, he said the United States is enforcing an oil "quarantine" using court orders to seize sanctioned shipments.

"That leverage remains," Rubio told CBS News, saying the pressure would stay in place until changes occur that serve US interests and benefit Venezuelans.

Rubio pushed back against repeated questions about who is "running" Venezuela. On NBC, he said Washington is not administering the country but shaping outcomes through policy tools.

"What we are running is policy," he said, referring to efforts to stop drug trafficking, dismantle gangs, and end the presence of foreign militant groups.

US Ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz echoed that message on Fox News' Sunday Morning Futures. Waltz said the operation was justified under international law and framed as self-defence.

"This is our hemisphere," Waltz told Fox News. "We are not going to allow it to become a base of operation for adversaries."

Waltz cited alleged ties between Maduro and China, Russia, Iran, and Hezbollah, arguing that decisive action was necessary to protect US security.

Rubio said the administration is not ruling out future steps but stressed that there are no US troops stationed in Venezuela. "We don't have US forces on the ground," he told NBC.

Responding to questions on elections and political transition, Rubio urged realism. "These things take time," he said on CBS. "There's a process."

The administration said it would judge Venezuela's next steps by actions rather than promises, while maintaining pressure until US security concerns are addressed.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
While the US claims it's about drug trafficking, the timing and method are suspicious. It feels like another regime change operation. The international community, including India, should call for calm and a diplomatic solution, not unilateral military actions.
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Priya S
Maduro's government had many problems, but this is not the way. "This is our hemisphere" is such a colonial mindset from the US ambassador. The world has moved on from that era. South Korea's civic groups are right to protest. Hope our MEA also takes a clear stand for sovereignty.
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Rohit P
Complex situation. If Maduro is indeed a narco-trafficker as per US courts, there is a legal angle. But bypassing the Venezuelan government entirely sets a bad example. India has always advocated for dialogue. Force should be the absolute last resort, not the first.
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Karthik V
Respectfully, I think some comments are missing the point about the drug charges. The article says he was indicted. It's not just about regime change. The US has a responsibility to its citizens if drugs are flowing in. But yes, the execution could have been more diplomatic.
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Meera T
The whole "shaping outcomes through policy tools" line is worrying. It means they will interfere without taking responsibility. This creates instability for ordinary Venezuelans. India must be careful in its dealings and not endorse such actions. Our foreign policy should stay principled.

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