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Trump gave Maduro ultimatum to flee Venezuela as land operations loom: report

By Eric December 1, 2025

In a dramatic escalation of tensions between the United States and Venezuela, President Donald Trump issued a stern ultimatum to Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, demanding his immediate resignation. According to a report from the *Miami Herald*, Trump communicated this warning during a phone call with Caracas, offering Maduro and his family a guaranteed evacuation if he agreed to step down. However, the conversation quickly stalled when Maduro sought “global amnesty” for crimes committed by his regime, a request that was firmly rejected by U.S. officials. The situation deteriorated further as Maduro insisted on retaining control over the armed forces, reminiscent of the political transition in Nicaragua in 1991, which the U.S. also dismissed.

In response to the impasse, Trump announced that Venezuelan airspace would be closed entirely, a move interpreted by defense experts as a precursor to potential military operations against Maduro’s command structure. Vanessa Neumann, a former Venezuelan diplomat, suggested that the closure of airspace signals imminent military action, possibly targeting key infrastructure and personnel within Maduro’s regime. She highlighted the weakened state of Venezuela’s military, which has suffered from years of corruption and neglect, making it ill-equipped to respond to such threats. The U.S. has also designated the Cartel de los Soles, a drug trafficking organization linked to the Venezuelan government, as a foreign terrorist organization, further tightening the noose around Maduro’s regime.

The implications of these developments are profound, as they not only signal a shift in U.S. policy towards Venezuela but also reflect the broader geopolitical landscape in Latin America. With Maduro’s allies, including Russia and Iran, facing their own challenges, the U.S. believes it may be an opportune moment to act decisively. Neumann pointed out that the Venezuelan military, once a formidable force in Latin America, is now plagued by outdated equipment and a lack of personnel, suggesting that any military operation could swiftly destabilize Maduro’s grip on power. As the U.S. ramps up its military and intelligence efforts against drug trafficking networks linked to Venezuela, the world watches closely to see how these tensions will unfold and whether they will lead to a significant change in Venezuela’s leadership.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OsODP1TIG9E

President Donald Trump delivered a stern ultimatum to Nicolás Maduro to leave Venezuela immediately before announcing the country’s airspace should be closed, according to a report.
Per the
Miami Herald
, Washington’s warning was delivered in a phone call with Caracas and offered guaranteed evacuation for Maduro, his wife Cilia Flores, and their son, but only if the dictator agreed to resign on the spot. 
The conversation stalled, U.S. officials said, and within hours Washington escalated dramatically. 
The ensuing impasse, a source told the outlet, was over Maduro asking for “global amnesty for any crimes he and his group had committed, and that was rejected.” 
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“Second, they asked to retain control of the armed forces — similar to what happened in Nicaragua in ’91 with Violeta Chamorro. In return, they would allow free elections.” 
The final issue was timing, according to the outlet, as Washington demanded that Maduro resign immediately – but Caracas refused.
Trump went on to announce Saturday that Venezuelan airspace would be considered “closed in its entirety.” 
The Herald also reported that the Maduro government tried to schedule another call to Washington but received no response.
According to a defense expert familiar with the country’s military and state-linked cartel ties, Maduro and key players in his regime could now face their most serious threat yet.
“I think the operations will start imminently,” former Venezuelan diplomat
Vanessa Neumann
told Fox News Digital.
“The clearing of the airspace is an indication and a very clear public warning that missiles might be coming to take out command and control infrastructure or retaliatory infrastructure,” Neumann said. “This will not be like breaking a jar into a thousand pieces, this is where you can lift the concentration of power, and it’s easier to manage.”
“The targets have been identified through covert operations over the last several years by people on the ground,” she continued. “So they’re well-mapped. This is a capture-or-kill scenario, but there’s a limit to how many people you can remove quickly.”
On Sunday, Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One not to “read anything into” his declaring Venezuela’s airspace closed when asked if a strike was imminent. 
“Maduro also doesn’t have that many options, and
his military is very weak,
” she warned. “You can’t go after 30 people simultaneously, who are spread all around, but certainly high on the list would be Maduro himself.”
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Venezuela’s armed forces, once among Latin America’s strongest, have been weakened by years of corruption, sanctions, defections, and lack of maintenance. Much of its equipment, Neumann says, has never even been serviced.
“Their material is extremely old, decayed, and has not been serviced,” Neumann explained. 
“They’ve got junk from the Russians. The stuff they originally had from the Americans is decades old and has not been serviced.
“So, they have neither the personnel, foreign support, nor the material,” she said.
Ahead of shuttering the airspace, the U.S. also officially designated the
cartel allegedly linked with Venezuela’s government
, the Cartel de los Soles, as a foreign terrorist organization.
“This cartel turned Venezuela’s main oil company into a narcotics trafficking money laundering operation, using the company’s access to international finance, until it was sanctioned,” Neumann, who has worked with governments on countering transnational organized crime linked to the group, explained.
“They were using Venezuelan military jets to bring in cocaine from Colombia, process it in Venezuela, and then move it into Central America and then into Europe.
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“Jet pilots were making a lot of money off that, and they’ve tortured people. They target people, anybody who tell on them, they’re disappeared,” Neumann said. “They’re now one of the prime drug trafficking networks into the United States and Europe, and use their military positions, including their military-to-military relations, to grow and accelerate those movements.”
In fact, in September, the European Parliament also voted in favor of the EU designating Cartel de los Soles as a terrorist organization.
“The Cartel de Los Soles is also a key collaborator and financier of Hezbollah and some of the drug money has been used to fund terrorist attacks that have killed American citizens, even in the Middle East,” added
Neumann
, CEO of Asymmetrica Group, which specializes in defense cooperation.
The U.S. has also ramped up a military and intelligence campaign targeting drug-trafficking networks linked to Venezuela, including strikes on suspected narcotics boats.
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“The decision is President Trump’s because when he says, ‘Go’, we go. And nobody knows when he’ll say that,” Neumann said. “He has mobilized so many assets down there now. But what President Trump is doing now is long overdue.”
“The timing is right now,” she added. “Because even Maduro’s biggest backers,
Russia and Iran
, are both on the back foot, and China will not go that far in backing Maduro as it has bigger and broader interests throughout the region.”
She also noted that “Maduro is also weakened because his partners are weakened and have their own issues to deal with,” and that “we also now have a concentration of power and deep repression within the country that’s quite unified, which means it’s easy to flip.”
WASHINGTON’S SHADOW WAR: HOW STRIKES ON CARTELS THREATEN TO COLLAPSE MADURO’S REGIME
Neumann identified others in the regime who may be targeted, including Vice President Delcy Rodríguez, Diosdado Cabello, Minister of Interior, Justice and Peace and Alexander Granko Arteaga, head of Venezuela’s counter-intelligence agency, the DGCIM.
“One of the reasons Granko is an important figure is that he’s one of the reasons why they haven’t capitulated and why there has not been a military uprising,” Neumann explained.
“It’s because of the brutality of the counter-intelligence that they do to their own military, and hundreds of soldiers are tortured. That said, the Venezuelan people have made it clear that they wanted Maduro out and fought democratically but lost,” she added.
“They voted in elections, protested peacefully, lobbied for sanctions, and lobbied for international support,” Neumann said.

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