Rubio Leads US Post-Operation Strategy in Venezuela Following Maduro Arrest

The White House has designated Secretary of State Marco Rubio to lead the implementation of the United States' post-operation strategy in Venezuela. The strategy involves a whole-of-government approach coordinating energy, Treasury, financial, and military policies. Senior adviser Stephen Miller emphasized ongoing US control, including an oil embargo and a military presence, stating the Venezuelan government is cooperating fully with Washington. The administration views the operation, which led to the arrest of Nicolás Maduro, as a major strategic victory.

Key Points: US Designates Rubio to Lead Venezuela Strategy Post-Maduro

  • Rubio to coordinate post-operation strategy
  • US maintains oil embargo and military posture
  • Miller claims full cooperation from Venezuelan government
  • Strategy spans diplomatic, economic, and military tools
  • Administration hails operation as historic strategic shift
3 min read

Rubio tasked to lead US post-operation strategy in Venezuela: White House

White House says Marco Rubio will coordinate US diplomatic, economic, and military strategy in Venezuela following the arrest of Nicolás Maduro.

"We have our massive fleet, our Armada still present there. This is an active and ongoing US government military operation. - Stephen Miller"

Washington, Jan 6

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has been designated by President Donald Trump to lead implementation of Washington's post-operation strategy in Venezuela, the White House said, outlining a whole-of-government effort that spans diplomatic, economic, financial, and military tools.

Stephen Miller, a close adviser to the president, told reporters at the White House on Monday that Rubio has been asked to enforce the president's guidance and coordinate across agencies.

"The President of the United States has asked Secretary Rubio ... to directly enforcement of the President's post guidance and direction to be the lead on this process," Miller said, adding that the work involves "energy policy, Treasury policy, financial policy, military policy."

Miller said the approach reflects broad coordination inside the administration. "It's a big team, a group of people," he said, while downplaying his own role. "I'm just happy to serve on this incredible team on behalf of President Trump."

Pressed on how Washington is effectively "running" Venezuela following the arrest of Nicolás Maduro and the swearing-in of a temporary leader, Miller pointed to US control over key pressure points. "We have an oil embargo on Venezuela," he said. "For them to do any kind of commerce, they need our permission."

He also cited the continued US military posture in the region. "We have our massive fleet, our Armada still present there," Miller said. "This is an active and ongoing US government military operation. So, of course, we set the terms and conditions."

Asked whether additional US personnel could be deployed, Miller rejected the premise that Venezuela's authorities are acting independently of Washington. "The government of Venezuela is working directly and cooperatively with the United States," he said.

Miller pushed back on suggestions that Venezuelan officials have struck a different public tone. "I don't know what conversations you're having with her," he told a reporter, referring to the acting leadership in Caracas. "But I'm telling you that our conversations are that we are very much getting full, complete, and total cooperation from the Government of Venezuela."

He said the administration believes such cooperation will lead to economic change inside the country. "As a result of that cooperation, the people of Venezuela are going to become richer than they ever have before," Miller said.

Miller argued the United States also stands to gain. "Of course, the United States is going to benefit from this massively in terms of economic, security, and military cooperation, counter narcotics, counter terrorism, and every other division of our security," he said.

Calling the effort a defining achievement, Miller said the administration views the Venezuela operation as "one of the greatest strategic shifts, rebalancing of power and military victories" in US history, culminating in the operation to capture Maduro. He declined to say whether similar actions could be replicated elsewhere.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
Interesting to see the US exerting such direct control. Miller saying "they need our permission" for commerce is a stark admission. It makes you wonder about sovereignty in today's world. India must ensure its strategic autonomy is never compromised like this.
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Aman W
The arrogance is astounding! "The people of Venezuela are going to become richer than they ever have before" – says who? The US? After imposing crippling sanctions? This is not liberation, it's neo-colonialism with a new face. Shameful.
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Sarah B
While the methods are heavy-handed, one cannot ignore the humanitarian crisis under Maduro. If this intervention leads to stability and economic relief for ordinary Venezuelans, perhaps it's a necessary evil. The proof will be in the results.
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Karthik V
The real story is the oil. "Energy policy" is first on Miller's list. The US fleet isn't there for charity. They're securing resources and influence. It's a reminder that foreign policy is always about national interest, dressed up in moral language.
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Varun X
As an Indian, this makes me uneasy. The principle of non-interference in internal affairs is crucial for global order. What stops a powerful country from deciding our government isn't to their liking? The UN Charter seems to be just paper for some.
N
Nikhil

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